Tac Teens Edition – Hot & Plus
So next time someone tells you to “tone it down” or “save that for your diary,” ask yourself: are they protecting me – or just protecting themselves from an uncomfortable truth?
Because your voice isn’t a rough draft. And growing up shouldn’t mean learning to self-censor before you even know what you think.
Then write it anyway. Edit it for clarity, not for fear. Share it with a friend. Post it. Print it. tac teens edition
This is your edition. Make some noise.
When we can’t write about anxiety, burnout, or the pressure to be perfect, we don’t stop feeling those things. We just stop talking about them. And silence isn’t safety. Silence is a lonely room where every teen thinks they’re the only one struggling. So next time someone tells you to “tone
Here’s a short, good essay written in the style of a piece. It’s persuasive, direct, and speaks to a teen audience. Title: Your Voice Isn’t a Test Draft – Stop Letting Them Erase It
The message is clear: Your real thoughts are dangerous. Then write it anyway
But here’s the thing we at TAC believe with every fiber of our WiFi-connected souls:
You’re sitting in English class. You’ve just poured your gut into a personal narrative about feeling invisible freshman year. The teacher hands it back. In red ink: “Too honest. Let’s keep this school-appropriate.”
Here’s what most people get wrong: they think censorship is just about banned books and swear words on TV. But for us, it’s the daily death-by-a-thousand-cuts of our actual lives. It’s the yearbook advisor killing the article on mental health because it’s “too dark.” It’s the principal deleting the student newspaper’s op-ed about how the dress code targets girls. It’s your own parents saying, “Don’t post that – colleges are watching.”